415 Pa. 28 | Pa. | 1964
Lead Opinion
Opinion by
In this action in equity, the chancellor entered a compulsory nonsuit. No motion to remove or set aside the judgment was entered below, but instead an appeal was filed directly to this Court. The appeal was prematurely taken and must be quashed.
An appeal does not lie from the entry of a judgment of nonsuit but rather from the refusal to take it off:
Plaintiffs-appellant maintain that the authority to enter a compulsory nonsuit is strictly statutory and that the chancellor lacked the power to enter such a judgment, after having heard evidence of the defendants. See Jordan v. Sun Life Assur. Co. of Canada, 366 Pa. 495, 77 A. 2d 631 (1951). Assuming the situation thus advanced is factually correct, it would in no manner affect plaintiffs-appellant’s obligation to pursue statutorily required procedure in attacking the judgment, or correct the error in prematurely filing this appeal.
A close examination of the record discloses additional fallacy in the above contention. When plaintiffs-appellant’s case was finished except for the testimony of a vital witness who was out of the state and unavailable, the court continued the hearing and fixed a subsequent date for the accommodation of this witness. After three such dates for hearing had been scheduled, and two months had passed without this testimony being available, the chancellor in the interests of expediency directed that the defendants proceed Avithout prejudice and reserving the right to apply for a compulsory nonsuit, when the plaintiffs-appellant’s testi-
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting Opinion by
I dissent.
The Act of March 11, 1875, P. L. 6, §1, 12 PS §645, provides: “Whenever the defendant, upon the trial of a cause in any conrt of common pleas of this commonivealth, shall offer no evidence, it shall he lawful for the judge presiding at the trial to order a judgment of nonsuit to he entered, if, in his opinion, the plaintiff shall have given no such evidence as in law is sufficient to maintain the action, with leave, nevertheless,
So far as the Court in banc is concerned, the Act is clearly permissive; it provides only for the situation in which the plaintiff in his sole discretion, files a motion with the Court in banc to set aside a judgment of nonsuit. The statute does not cover, nor does it purport to cover, a situation in which a judgment of nonsuit is entered by the presiding Judge and an appeal from that judgment is taken directly to this Court. Certainly it is a better and wiser practice to move the Court in banc to set aside the judgment of nonsuit. However, recent cases recognize that a plaintiff may
It is clear that the losing party (a) may appeal directly from the judgment of compulsory nonsuit entered by the presiding trial Judge, or (b) may appeal the refusal of the Court in banc to set aside a compulsory nonsuit. Since this statute is clearly discretionary so far as the Court in banc is concerned, a direct appeal from the trial Judge’s entry of judgment of compulsory nonsuit is undoubtedly permissible. For this reason I must dissent from the Order to quash.
Italics throughout, ours.